unprecedented and unrepeatable

unprecedented and unrepeatable

Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ā oqi á nju é h ò u, meaning to surpass the predecessors, and there is no comparison in the future. It comes from the inscription of Zhaowang in Anlu, Qi Dynasty.

The origin of Idioms

In the inscriptions of emperor Zhaowang in Qi gu'anlu written by Liang and Shen Yue in the Southern Dynasty, Li Shan quoted from the inscriptions of emperor Zhaowang in Jin's daily life, which said: "Yuan's achievements and virtues are unprecedented."

Analysis of Idioms

Synonyms: unprecedented, ahead of anecdotes; Antonyms: ubiquitous and common

Idiom usage

As a predicate or attributive. Feiniang exclaimed: "there are such strange and fierce women in the world. They keep their chastity and are still as good as others. They would rather die than show up. The loss of their mother-in-law is really unprecedented." Six or nine chapters of the wild old man's Expositions

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